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A34877 A supplement to Knowledge and practice wherein the main things necessary to be known and believed in order to salvation are more fully explained, and several new directions given for the promoting of real holiness both of heart and life : to which is added a serious disswasive from some of the reigning and customary sins of the times, viz. swearing, lying, pride, gluttony, drunkenness, uncleanness, discontent, covetousness and earthly-mindedness, anger and malice, idleness / by Samuel Cradock ... useful for the instruction of private families. Cradock, Samuel, 1621?-1706. 1679 (1679) Wing C6756; ESTC R15332 329,893 408

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what sweet Meditations should we have of Gods Mercy Love thankfulness and praise should be our daily exercise Had we Davids heart what Songs of praise would the consideration of Gods Mercy teach us to indite How affectionately should we recount the Mercies of our youth and riper years Yea of every state and condition we have been in to the honour of our great Benefactor But especially if God hath touched our hearts with his saving grace if he hath effectually called us and inabled us to repent of our sins and believe in his Son O then how should we bow down our heads and adore his free grace as the cause thereof If we have received any grace tending to our own sanctification or the edification of others Let us say as Paul did 1 Cor. 15.20 By the grace of God I am that I am Thirdly The meditation of Gods goodness and mercy to us should possess us with a superlative love to God Most certainly the prevailing love of God is the surest evidence of true sanctification He that hath most love has most grace And if you truly love God you will be loath to offend him The love of God doth not reign in that soul where the love of the World or of the Flesh or Pleasure reigneth Fourthly The Mercy of God should teach us to imitate him in this Attribute We should labour to be mercifull as our Heavenly Father is mercifull that is as to the manner though we cannot reach to the measure The goodness of God should possess us with a desire to be conformed to his goodness in our measure Summae Religionis est imitari quem colis Now God is mercifull two ways especially in Giving Forgiving First In Giving O how does the Lord supply our wants daily Let us therefore shew mercy to those that want our help Secondly In Forgiving O what a vast number of debts does the Lord forgive us Gods mercy to us layes the greatest Obligation imaginable upon us to forgive others (c) A Christian may remember offences in cautelam though not in vindictam Matth. 18.23 Shall not we forgive an Hundred Pence who have had Ten Thousand Talents forgiven unto us Fifthly We should especially observe and take notice of the mercy of God so highly manifested in the design of our Redemption 1 Joh. 4.10 Here is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be a propitiation for our sins Was there ever Mercy like this We have reason to cry out O the depth of the riches of the mercy of God! O Lord what is man that thou art so mindful of him or the Son of man that thou thus visitest him with thy favour and mercy Sixthly Gods goodness and mercy should encourage our Souls to trust in him How many friends have some men with whom they dare trust their Estates or Lives because they are confident they truly love them And shall we not trust God who is love it self 1 John 4.16 I come now to the last of Gods communicable Attributes which I shall speak unto which is His faithfulness in keeping of his Covenant and Promises V. God is Faithful Faithful One letter of Gods glorious Name is abundant in truth or faithfulness The Scriptures abundantly bear Testimony unto this Deut. 7.9 Know therefore that the Lord thy God he is God the faithfull God which keepeth Covenant and Mercy with them that love him and keep his Commandements to a Thousand Generations Isai 49.7 The Lord who is faithfull Rom. 3.4 Let God be true that is owned and acknowledged for such though all mankind should be false and deceitful Now Gods Faithfulness is manif●sted Two ways In fulfilling his promises In accomplishing his Threatnings God cannot in any case fail of his word It is impossible for him to lie Heb. 6.18 Tit. 1.2 As God is light and in him there is no darkness 1 Joh. 1.5 So he is truth and in him there is no falshood The strength of Israel will not lye 1 Sam. 15.29 And Numb 23.19 God is not a man that he should lye God hath promised to them that repent and believe in his Son that they shall be saved He hath promised to give his Holy Spirit to them that ask him Luk. 11 9. And we have reason firmly to believe these promises As for Temporal things he hath not promised them to any of his Children absolutely but with a tacit condition if he in his infinite Wisdom see it good and expedient for them So that as to these we must humbly refer our selves to his infinite Wisdom 'T is true we are required to pray for these Temporal things in faith but not with an assured particular perswasion that God will give us the very particular things we ask but with a faith of dependance on God and submission to his Holy will When we act faith on the All-sufficiency and Power of God and humbly resign our selves to his Holy will we may be said to pray in faith I come now to the Lessons which we are to learn from the consideration of this Attribute First We should learn from hence that the commands of God are serious and his promises and threatnings will certainly be accomplished There is nothing of reason or sence can be spoken against an Holy life by any one who believes the veracity and faithfulness of God and the truth of his Word Hath God said and do you believe it that he will come in flaming Fire to take vengeance on all them that know not God and obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Thess 1.8 And can you continue in ignorance and disobedience Hath he said that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 And can you continue in unrighteousn●ss Hath he said Heb. 12.14 Without Holiness no man shall see the Lord and can you slight Holiness And mock at serious Piety If you believ'd God to be faithfull and his Word true how could these things be so Secondly Gods faithfulness is a great aggravation of the heinousness of the sin of unbelief He that believeth not God hath made him a lyer faith the Apostle 1 Joh. 5.10 And this is the rather to be heeded that we may stir up in our selves a diligent watchfulness against this sin which with many is accounted but a meer infirmity O what matter of humiliation doth our proneness to this sin namely to distrust God justly minister unto us Many men hardly trust the promises of God so much as they would the word of a mortal man whom they account honest and just Certainly Gods faithfulness and truth should teach us to hate every motion to unbelief Vnbelief is the very bane of all Religion so far as it prevails Let it be our great care therefore to extirpate all remainders of this sin of Infidelity out of our hearts Thirdly If God be faithful this should be a great encouragement to us to trust in him and
to 24. Luke 9. from 43 to 46. 14. He pays the half shekel for himself and Peter miraculously fetching it out of the Fishes mouth Mat. 17. from 24. to 28. 15. He teacheth by the example of a little Child who is the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven and among his Disciples He forbiddeth to hinder such as cast out Devils in his name He promiseth a reward to any that do the least good office to any that are his He sheweth what punishment they are worthy of that give offence and how narrowly men must beware they give not scandal to little ones whom the Holy Angels do take care of and whom he is come to save as he declares by the similitude of a lost Sheep He shews what mischiefs are like to come to the World by reason of the offences and scandals That we must refrain from whatsoever is an occassion of sin or an hindrance to Salvation though as dear to us as our right eye right hand or foot rather than go to Hell where the worm dieth not and where the fire is not quenched That the hearts of Christians must be seasoned with the Salt of Grace and Holiness That they his Apostles are the Salt of the Earth and must be of savoury Spirits themselves and by the Savouriness of their Doctrine and Conversation must season others and maintain concord and union among themselves He gives rules about dealing with a trespassing and offending Brother and shews what the office and power of the Church is in such a case when the first and second admonition doth not prevail to reform him He promises his gracious presence with his Church be the number great or small when they joyn together in Prayer or Church-censures He shews how we must be ready always to forgive which is declared by the Parable of a King forgiving one of his servants ten thousand Talents who would not forgive a fellow servant of his one hundred pence Mark 9. from 33. to the end Mat. 18. from 1. to the end Luke 9. from 46. to 51. 16 His Kinsmen now perswade him to go up with them to Jerusalem to the Feast of Tabernacles which he refuseth for the present to do John 7. from 1. to 10. 17. But after some days he setteth forth privately with his own Disciples for Jerusalem journeying thitherward through Samaria the Samaritans refuse him lodging James and John desire they may call for fire from Heaven upon them but are rebuked by him for it John 7.10 Luke 9. from 51. to 57. 18. He declares his poverty to a Scribe that had a mind to follow him he commands another to follow him without delay and not go home to bury his Father To another that would have gone home to take leave of his friends he declares that as he that starteth from the Plough is not fit for the Field no more is he that shifteth from his Calling fit for his service Luke 9. from 57. to the end Mat. 8. from 19. to 23. 19. He now sendeth out his Diciples to preach the Gospel and work Miracles He instructs them how they should fit themselves for their journey and how they should carry themselves towards their hearers He threatens Corazin Bethsaida and Capernaum for their great impenitency and contempt of the Gospel Luke 10. from 1. to 17. 20. Being now come to Jerusalem at the Feast of Tabernacles he teacheth in the Temple vindicates his Doctrine and shews them how they may try Doctrines and Teachers Then he vindicates his practice in healing the impotent man on the Sabbath day divers opinions of the people concerning him He proceeds on in teaching which so inraged some of the Jews that they sought to take him but for the present they could not The Pharisees and chief Priests send their officers to apprehend him He threatens the unbelieving Jews that hereafter they shall seek him and shall not find him On the last day of the Feast he invites unto him all that are spiritually athirst and promiseth the Holy Ghost to those that believe in him upon this a division ariseth among the people The Officers that were sent to apprehend him return without bringing him Prisoner and extol his Doctrine The Pharisees are enraged at this and speak reproachfully of him and of the people who were so taken with him Nicodemus gainsayeth their proceeding pleading he was not to be condemned before he was heard Hereupon not agreeing among themselves they part and go their several ways John 7. from 11. to the end 21. Early in the morning he teacheth in the Temple whither they bring to him a woman taken in Adultery he frustrates their intention against him and dismisses the woman with a serious admonition He teacheth that himself is the light of the World He defends himself against the Pharisees by his own and his Fathers testimony He tells the Jews they shall hereafter seek him in vain and shall die in their sins if they believe not in him He declareth who he is and by whom he is sent He promiseth those that believe in him knowledge of the truth and freedom from the Servitude and Slavery of sin He proveth that the unbelieving Jews wrongfully boasted that they were Abraham's and Gods Children they being Children of the Devil because they fulfilled his lusts He reproves their unbelief for which they slander him as a Samaritan who hath a Devil This calumny he confuteth and testifieth that Abraham saw his day and that he was before Abraham at this they would have stoned him but he secretly conveyed himself from their fury John 8. whole Chapter 22. He anoints the eyes of a man that was born blind with clay and that on the Sabbath day and commanding him to wash in the waters of Siloam restores him to his sight The man being brought to the Pharisees relates the same They reproach Christ as a breaker of the Sabbath and seem to doubt whether this man had ever been blind They send for his Parents who refer them to their Son whom they call and examine again He answereth them and from this Miracle argueth that Christ is no Sinner but a person extraordinary and sent from God for which Testimony he is reproachfully cast out by them and excommunicated He is further instructed by Christ believeth in him and worshipeth him Christ telleth the Pharisees that they are Spiritually blind and therefore they remain in sin because they are not sensible of their blindness John 9. whole Chapter 23. Upon this occasion he propounds the Parable of the Faithful and true Shepherd and of the false and unfaithful describing them by their contrary marks and properties and points out himself as the true Shepherd of his Sheep as also the true door of the Sheep-fold That he is no hireling seeing that he willingly lays down his life for his Sheep His hearers are divided in their opinions concerning him John 10. from 1. to 22. 24. The Seventy Disciples return and joyfully relate what
But does not the annexing of such a condition as this unto forgiveness lessen the grace and bounty of it Answer No in no wise For consider these things 1. The dispensing of pardon and forgiveness upon such a condition as faith in Christ which includes Gospel obedience is one of the most effectual means to introduce sanctity and holiness into the World For what more effectual way can there be to do it than to make it conditionally necessary to justification and salvation 2. Gods immutable holiness and justice is hereby made more illustrious and his solemn hatred and dislike of sin is more manifested For hereby 't is evident that God will save no man in his sins but from his sins Whom he justifies he will sanctify No mans sin is so forgiven that the least allowance is vouchsafed to it None but such as are sanctified can be accepted of him 3. Whatever is by the Gospel conditionally required of us is fully and freely given us Faith and every other grace is the gift of God We perform the condition required of us solely by the power of his grace freely given unto us And all the rewards of the Gospel are but the gracious remunerations of Gods own gifts and graces Free grace and divine bounty is the root that bears all And therefore the holiest men on earth have the greatest cause to be most humble For having received most they ought most to abase themselves 4. 'T is fit that all who shall be saved should be rationally satisfied of the excellency of that life the Gospel calls them unto For the precepts of the Gospel are framed and calculated for our advantage and benefit The commands of Christ are in no wise grievous to any man truly and rationally informed of his own interest The Gospel commands us to be sober righteous and godly and 't is rationally best for us so to be both in order to our own good and the good and benefit of others among whom we live And therefore 't is fit we should make a solemn choice of this life for our selves and seriously resolve as men of truth and fidelity to pursue it There ought to be sincerity of intention and endeavour in us to live this life though we do not arrive at perfection of action We should therefore examine what is the deliberate choice of our wills whether to be Sanctified by the Spirit of Christ as well as to be justified by his merits Christ will not judge of us by a suddain passionate choice but by our rational and advised choice And we must especially take heed of all degrees of insincerity and hypocrisie which of all sins under the Gospel does most dangerously border on a breach of the condition required Believe it those things that keep people usually from the good things of the Gospel are either a direct refusal of Christ or a sloathful carelesness unconcerned neglect of him or a prevailing falseness in the course of Gospel obedience I shall conclude all that I shall say upon this argument with these four particulars 1. Our Lord and Saviour did certainly perform all things that were required to be performed by him as our mediator 2. By reason of the high dignity of his person his obedience and sufferings are of more value and worth than the obedience and sufferings of all mankind would have been 3. These things being performed by him in our nature and wholly upon o●r account God accepts them for us though not as done by us and reckons all the benefits and advantages of them to us 4. If we desire to partake of the benefits of Christs active and passive obedience we must sincerly believe in him and take him for our Lord and Saviour and if our Faith be a true justifying Faith it will purify our hearts and reform our lives Having thus explained this Doctrine of the forgiveness of sins let us now consider what improvement we should make of it 1. Let us admire the infinite goodness of God that there is a possibility of pardon for the children of men who are naturally under wrath There is none for the Angels that fell 2. Let us often meditate upon and admire the way of it 1. No pardon to be obtained for man without a Mediator And where could fallen man have found a Mediator that would have undertaken his cause 2. No ordinary Mediator would suffice If all the holy Angels had joyned together it would have not been sufficient Only the eternal Son of God could effect it 3. Let us consider that Christ obtained our peace not by a bare mediation but by paying a price for us and making full satisfaction to the Will and Justice of God by his obedience and sufferings 3. Let us often admire the benefits of it 1. It is not only a great mercy in it self but the foundation of all other mercies 'T is the Queen of mercies that hath a glorious train of other mercies attending it Psal 32.1 Blessed is the man whose sins are forgiven whose iniquities are covered to whom the Lord imputeth not transgression None of the antient Philosophers ever gave such a definition of happiness 2. The sense of this mercy makes all afflictions more easie to be born What can hurt us if God be reconciled to us 3. Pardoning mercy brings healing with it unto the Soul Christ Sanctifies those by his Spirit whose pardon he procures by his Merits 4. It affords great comfort against death which is otherwise terrible of terribles 4. If pardoning mercy be so great a mercy let us often consider how vile and wretched those persons are who slight this mercy But who are they 1. All careless ones who neglect this great salvation and prefer the things of the World before it 2. All wicked and prophane ones who go on daily increasing their guilt not minding to make peace with God 3. All that rest on any thing besides Christs righteousness and intercession for the procuring their pardon with God 5. Let us all examine our selves whether we have obtained this blessedness or no. Many content themselves with weak grounds on which they build their hopes of pardon 1. They are not so bad as others They think they are sinners yet guilty but of few sins in comparison of what others are guilty of I answer Possibly they may not be so bad as others yet they may be in a very bad condition for all that out of which if they do not get they will be everlastingly miserable 2. Others think well of them Be it so But we shall not stand or fall by mans Judgment 3. They live civilly so they may do and yet be unconverted and without true conversion and regeneration no salvation is to be expected 6. Seeing God is ready to forgive let us all endeavor to secure this blessedness to our selves 1. Let us seek it as earnestly as ever we sought any thing in the World 2. those that must shortly be arraigned If a guilty Malefactor knew
A SUPPLEMENT TO Knowledge AND PRACTICE Wherein the main things necessary to be known and believed in order to Salvation are more fully explained and several new Directions given for the promoting of real Holiness both of Heart and Life To which is added a serious Disswasive from some of the reigning and customary sins of the Times viz. Swearing Lying Pride Gluttony Drunkenness Vncleanness Discontent Covetousness and Earthly-mindedness Anger and Malice Idleness By Samuel Cradock B. D. late Rector of North-Cadbury in Somerset-Shire Useful for the Instruction of private Families Quod de Scripturis authoritatem non habet pari facilitate rejicitur qua accipitur Hieron LONDON Printed for Thomas Simmons at the Princes Arms in St. Pauls Church-yard 1679. To the INHABITANTS of NORTH-CADBURY in SOMERSETSHIRE My Loving Friends SOme years since when I stood in the Relation of a Pastor to you I wrote my Book of Knowledge and Practice aiming therein more especially at your benefit Which Treatise I hope through the Lords blessing hath been of some use to you I have since thought that it would not be a service unacceptable to you to add by way of Supplement a more full explication of the Main Principles of the Christian Faith and some Further Directions for regulating of your Practice and to send them unto you to supply my Personal absence God only knows whether I shall ever see your Faces again in this World Providence having fixed my Habitation at so great a distance from you However my hearts desire and prayer to God for you is that you may be saved and if this poor Book may in any measure contribute thereunto I shall heartily rejoyce The holy Apostles no doubt in writing their Epistles aimed at the Spiritual good of the Church in general yet we may well suppose that those particular Churches to whom their Epistles were directed read them with more especial regard and possibly reaped more signal benefits by them than others did So though I design these instructions for your Spiritual good and benefit of all those into whose hands they shall come Yet I hope they shall be more especially minded and regarded by you to whom they are particularly directed and in contemplation of whose necessities and with an aim at whose benefit they were particularly framed I know many of you are such of whom the Apostle speaks Heb. 5.12 Who have need that one teach you the first Principles of the Oracles of God and have need of milk and not of strong meat I should be glad to have you all rightly instructed in the main fundamentals of Christianity and that not for your sakes only but for my own that I may give up my account with joy and not with grief Heb. 13.17 But yet I must tell you that it is not enough to save any of you that you are of the true Religion except you be true to it and live agreeably thereunto God hath indeed made sufficient provision by the obedience and death of his Son to save Mankind But you must earnestly leg of God to inable you to do your part which is unfeignedly to repent of all your sins savingly to believe in Christ and to accept him for your Lord and Saviour and to deliver up your souls to him that you may be pardoned through the infinite merit of his active and passive obedience and sanctified by his Spirit and inabled by his grace to lead a holy and good life And as I earnestly desire you all to have an especial care of your own Souls so do I with some importunity intreat all that are Parents or Masters of Families among you that they would take great care to instruct their children and servants in the main Principles of the Christian Religion I have often thought that if ever real Piety and Christianity flourish in England more must he done by Parents and Masters in instructing those under their care than is now ordinarily done I hope this short Treatise may with the blessing of God something assist and help you in performing that part of your duty May the God of all grace lead you and guide you in ways of truth and holiness and inable you to live in love and peace one with another And though I should never see you again in this life yet may the Father of Mercies through his infinite goodness grant that I may meet your Souls in Heaven This is the earnest desire and prayer of him who was once your unworthy Pastor and is still your very loving and affectionate friend Wickham brook Novemb. 6. 1678. SAM CRADOCK The CONTENTS of the FIRST PART CHAP. I. Of God SECT 1. Of the Nature of God and his Divine Attributes page 1. SECT 2. Of the Trinity of persons in the unity of the Divine Essence page 18. SECT 3. Of the works of God page 31. 1. Creation where Of good Angels page 32. Of evil Angels page 40. 2. Particular page 48. CHAP. 2. Of Man Page 62 SECT 1. Of the happy State wherein Man was created and the Covenant of Works made with him in that State p. 62. SECT 2. Of his Fall and the consequents thereof p. 66 SECT 3. Of the Covenant of Grace made with Man immediately after his Fall which shews the only way of his recovery to be by Jesus Christ p. 73 CHAP. 3. Of Jesus Christ Page 80 SECT 1. Of his Titles which in the Creed are four 1. Jesus p. 80 2. Christ where of his three Offices Prophet p. 83 Priest p. 86 King p. 88 3. His only Son p. 91 4. Our Lord p. 93 SECT 2. Of his Natures Divine and Humane p. 95 SECT 3. Of his birth p. 96 SECT 4. Of his Life p. 100 Here a short and methodical History of our Saviours Life is exhibited and the particular Times in which he instituted Baptism and the Sacrament of his Supper are pointed at Vpon both which Sacraments there are distinct discourses added at the end SECT 5. Of his Death and Burial p. 137 SECT 6. Of that Article in the Creed He descended into Hell page 131 SECT 7. Of his Resurrection and ten several appearings after it in the space of forty dayes he continued on the earth p. 143 SECT 8. Of his Ascention and sitting on Gods right hand p. 149 SECT 9. Of his coming to judg the World p. 154 CHAP. 3. SECT 1. Of the Holy Ghost p. 162 SECT 2. Of the Catholick Church 166 SECT 3. Of Communion of Saints p. 175 SECT 4. Of forgiveness of sins p. 178 SECT 5. Of the Resurrection of the body p. 193 SECT 6. Of Life everlasting Of Baptism p. 200 Of the Lords Supper p. 205 Of the Lords Prayer p. 220 The second part contains a serious disswasive from some of the reigning and customary sins of the Times viz. Swearing Lying Pride Gluttony Drunkennness Vncleanness Discontent Covetousness and Earthly-mindedness Anger and Malice Idleness ERRATA IN page 267 after the eighth Direction add Ninthly Take heed of saying ●s
suggests good for evil ends or evil for good ends 3. Good Angels comfort strengthen and support in times of distress and trouble Thus they ministred to our Saviour after Satan had fiercely assaulted him with Temptations Matth. 4.11 So like wise when he was in his agony Luke 22.43 There appeared an Angel unto him from Heaven strengthening of him And what they did for Christ the Head they do for his Members in measure and proportion and as far forth as God sees good for them 4. They convey the Souls of the departed Saints into Heaven Luke 16.22 And it came to pass that the Begger died and was carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosom And thus much of their Ministry in relation to the Saints There are many usefull instructions that arise from this Doctrine of good Angels 1. Hereby we may see the great priviledge of the Saints of God They have the Guardianship of the Holy Angels Whether every Saint of God every Heir of Heaven have a peculiar and proper Angel to attend him is much disputed and canvassed by the Schoolmen But there seems no ground in the Word of God to appropriate a single Angel to every single Saint 'T is surely a greater dignity and benefit that every one of the Faithfull have many Angels appointed by the Lord for his Guard whereof the proof is manifest from the 91 Psalm 11. For he shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy ways and from 34 Psalm 7. The Angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him and delivereth them As for that place Acts 12.15 Where they said concerning Peter It is his Angel the meaning of it probably is this they hearing the Maid persist in it that Peter was at the door they apprehending that very unlikely thought some Holy Angel had assum'd his shape and voice and stood at the door in his resemblance But this proves not that every Saint hath a peculiar Angel Guardian The Angels indefinitely have charge over Gods People as God is pleased to assign th●m their Province and to imploy them in that Ministry But yet they execute this Ministry as superiour Guides not as inferiour Attendants Properly they are not Servants to us but to God for us There is no ground for our worsh●ppi●g of them th●y being our fell●w Creatures Rev. 19.10 I ●ell at his feet to worship him But he said See thou do it not I am thy fellow servant and of thy Brethren that have the Testimony of Jesus worship God 2. We may take notice of Gods wonderfull goodness in so graciously providing for his Saint● and Servants Lord what is man that thou art so mindful● of him Ther● is more in Holiness than the World doth see The Saints have Gods Power Christ Med●ation t●e Spirits conduct the Ministry of Angels all ingaged for their benefit 3. We may observe the great humility and condescention of these Holy Angels and their great love to mankind They rejoyc●d when the World was made for man Job 38.7 They rejoyced at the coming of Christ for mans Redemption Luke 2.13 They rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner Luke 15.10 4. We should labour to imitate these Holy Angels in their readiness and willing obedience to Gods will If we would be like Angels h●reafter in glory and bliss let us labour to imitate them here in a chearfull service of God 5. Let us labour to secure our interest in Christ that so we may be under the Protection of these Holy Angels For they Minister only for the good of them who are Heirs of Salvation 6. Let us take heed of depriving our selves of their help and Ministry Pride Lust Vanity are offensive to them And so are all impurities and indecencies in Gods Worship as the Apostle intimates to us 1 Cor. 11.10 Let us therefore take heed lest by any of these ways we grieve or drive from us these blessed helpers and Assistants Of Evil Angels Of Evil Angels Having thus spoken concerning good Angels we come now to speak concerning the Angels that fell Concerning whom these things are to be inquired into 1. The Names and Titles by which they are set forth in the Scripture 2. Their sin 3. How they came to sin being created pure 4. The time when they sinned 5. The number of them that sinned 6. Their nature properties and employment 7. Their punishment Present and Future 8. What instructions their fall wickedness and misery do afford unto us 1. The Names and Titles by which they are set forth in the Scripture The general and comprehensive Name of evil Angels in the Scripture is Devil Diabolus wich signifies an accuser or slanderer He is called also the wicked One the old Serpent the Adversary the roaring Lyon the Abaddon Appollyon or destroyer the great Dragon a lyer and the Father of lyes a Murderer a Murderer from the beginning the god of this World 2 Cor. 4.4 The Prince of the power of the Air Eph. 2.2 The Angel of the bottomless Pit Satan Rev. 12.9 The Spirit that worketh in the Children of disobedience Eph. 2.2 The Tempter Psal 78.49 And Eph. 6.12 We read of evil Angels that they are called Principalities Powers Rulers of the darkness of this World Spiritual wickedness in High places 2. Let us consider what was their sin The greatest evidence of the Nature of their sin we find in that place of the Apostle 1 Tim. 3.6 where he shews that a Person to be ordained should not be a Novice lest being lifted up with Pride he fall into Condemnation of the Devil that is be guilty of that sin viz. Pride which young men are so prone unto for which the Devil was Condemned and rejected of God Pride therefore seems to be as I may so speak the Original sin of those Apostate Angels But envy malice slandering c. are their actual sins Yet what kind of pride it was and how it discovered it self is not easie to determine Whether it was an affectation to be as high as God himself or a seeking to be higher than God had made them is not easie to be resolv'd Certain it is the Temptation they spred before our first Parents was ye shall be as Gods Or whether they refused the Work Office and Ministration God design'd them unto in reference to Men. Or whether it was too great a confidence and glorying in their own gifts and received excellencies or whether it was an affectation of Worship from men as we see they now delight in it or whether it was any other Rebellion against Gods Majesty and Empire 't is hard to determine Some learned men make it a compounded sin For as there were many sins in that sin by which Adam fell viz. Vnbelief Pride Ingratitude Disobedience so this first sin of the Angels might be compounded of many other sins though Pride were cheif in it Whatever their first sin was this is manifest they abode not in the truth They kept
had by sin mad● God his enemy he needed no Mediator to mediate or intercede for him 8. This Covenant in case of disobedience afforded man no relief no not upon his repentance And thus the case stood with man in the state of his Innoc●nce Of Ma●s fa●● We come now to the second thing I propounded to treat of concerning man and that is his fall from his Original happiness by disobeying the precept and command of God and forfeiting the priviledges of the Covenant contained in it Gen. 3. from 1. to 7. Now the Serpent was m●re subtil than any Beast of the field which the Lord God had made and he said unto the woman Yea hath God said Ye shall not eat of every Tree of the Garden And the Woman said unto the Serpent We may eat of the fruit of the Trees of the Garden But of the fruit of the Tree which is in the midst of the Garden God hath said Ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it lest ye die And the Serpent said unto the Woman ye shall not surely die For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof then your eyes shall be opened and ye shall be as gods knowing good and evil And when the woman saw that the Tree was good for food and that it was pleasant to the eyes and a Tree to be desired to make one wise she took of the fruit thereof and did eat and gave also unt● her Huusband with her and he did eat And the eyes of them both were opened and they knew that they were naked and they sewed Fig-leaves together and made themselves Aprons Rom. 5.12 19. Wherefore as by one man sin entred into the World and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous And that I may speak more distinctly of the matter I shall inquire in to these particulars 1. Who were the first sinners among men and by whom sin entered into the World 2. What was the first sin 3. What were the causes and occasions of Adams first transgression 4. What were the sad effects and consequents of this sin and breach of the Covenant First Upon our first Parents Secondly Upon us their Posterity 1. We shall inquire who were the first sinners among men and by whom sin entred into the World Adam and Eve the first Man and first Woman were certainly among men the first transgressors as may appear by those places before cited Gen. 3. And Rom 5.12 And the Apostle tells us 1 Tim. 2.14 Adam was not deceived that is First and by the Devil and so as to draw Eve into transgression but the woman being deceived was first * Th●●gh Eve was first in the trangression yet Adam was the chief and therefore Adam is sometimes taken collectively both for man and woman in the transgression and drew Adam into it Hosea 6.7 God says of the unfaithful Israelites They like Adam have transgressed the Covenant And 2 Cor. 11.3 We read that the Serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty viz. To eat of the forbidden fruit and she persuaded Adam to eat also It therefore we trace corruption and depravation to the well-head we shall find we cannot stay any where till we come to the first Man the common Parent and Root of us all And 't is very evident that the first Fountain of mankind was corrupted seeing all the streams are so 2. Let us consider what was the first sin God made our first Parents holy and happy and whilst they performed their duty they could not but be happy But the Devil having fallen from God himself as we have seen before Sect 3. and envying our first Parents their present happiness he sets upon Eve to draw her from her obedience to God And the temptation he spred before her is this you shall be as God He pretends to acquaint her with a way whereby they might raise thems●lves to a higher condition than that wherein they were at present They should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like God himself or like Angels they should be lifted up to a higher estate than now they enjoyed And this happiness he tells them they might acquire by eating of that Tree in the midst of the Garden which God had forbidden them which he intimates would be so far from procuring death or misery to a them that it had a contrary virtue in it namely to raise them to higher state of happiness than now they enjoyed Eve being caught by this subtil device began to believe this Serpent who thus proves himself a Lyar and a Murderer from the beginning and to d● believe God and to doubt the truth of his threatning and commination who Gen. 2.17 had told Adam Of that Tree thou shalt not eat for in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die Ev● being thus won upon by the D●vils temptation did venture to e●t of this sorbidden fruit and dre● Adam to eat also So that infi●elity and doubting of the truth of Gods word and threatnings t●rough the Devils insinuation and pride and affection of an h●gher estate seem to be the first miscarriages and sins of Adam and Eve O the cursed Nature of pride and unbelief How soon did these ●●ns enter into the very Angels How soon did they undo our first Parents 3. Let us inq●ire what were the causes and occasions of Adams sin 1. God was not The pure and holy Nature of God could not be the Original of mans sin The Holy God cannot be the cause of any unholiness God indeed permitted man to fall seeing he knew how to bring good out of it But he inclin'd him not to it 2. Neither external Objects nor the temptations of Satan could nec●ssitate the will of man to sin The Devil might persuade but could not force 3. The persuading cause in respect of Eve was Satan in the form of a Serpent The Devil opened the Serpents mouth and caused it to speak with mans voice as an Angel opened the mouth of Balaams Ass Numb 22.28 Now the Serpents cunning may appear in this 1. He first assaults the Woman not the Man 2. He equivocates about knowing good and evil which he represents to her as a state of perfection Whereas the forbidden Tree was called the Tree of knowledge because Adam if he did eat thereof should experimentally know to his sorrow from how much good he had fallen and how much evil he had brought upon himself 3. He uses Eve a Companion newly made for Adam and surely very dear to him to draw in her Husband 4. Man being not created at first immutably Holy but defectible and sin being only a defect a person that was mutable and defectibly Holy as Adam was might fall into sin 'T was no strange thing that Man should be created defectible and being a defectible and
7. What is required of them who may expect this great priviledge 1. We shall consider what Sin is and what is the foul nature of it that so we may the better estimate the great goodness of God in pardoning of it The Apostle shews us 1 John 3.4 that Sin is the transgression of the Law The Law of God is the rule of the actions of man and any deviation from that rule is a Sin and brings us under guilt 2. Let us consider what are the kinds of Sin Sin is either original or actual 1. Original Sin is by the Church of England in her Articles described to be a fault and corruption of the nature of every man that naturally is engendred of the off-spring of Adam whereby man is very far gone from original Righteousness and inclined unto evil In which description three things may be observed 1. Original sin is the corruption of the nature of every man descended from the loins of Adam 2. It is a departure from that original Righteousness wherewith the Lord enriched Adam and our selves in him 3. 'T is an inclination to evil So that the whole race and off-sping of Adam who were then radically seminally and potentially in his loins were infected with this contagion As the Scripture sayes of Levi that he paid tythes in Abraham to Melchisedec Heb. 7.9 10. For he was then in the loyns of his Father Abraham when Melchisedec met him So all we and the whole race of Mankind were in Adam when he lost himself And that we are all from the womb tainted with this original corruption * Unum illud peccatum fons est aliorum Becan and depravation of nature is plain and manifest from these Scriptures Psal 51.5 Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my mother conceive me Ephes 2.3 And were by nature the children of wrath even as others And that even Infants themselves are tainted with this original corruption may appear from this that they are liable to death Now Death is a wages no way due to Infants for actual sins for actually as yet they have not offended therefore there must need be in them some original guilt some birth-sin which makes them liable to death 2. Actual sin which is the fruit of original is any action or commission or any omission repugnant unto the Law of God 3. Let us consider the wages of sin The Apostle tells us Rom. 6. last The wages of sin is death The wages due reward and fruit of sin is death But life eternal is the fruit of righteousness not as its wages but as a gift freely given by God upon the account of the merit and intercession of Jesus Christ Every sin therefore being a deviation from the Law of God brings us under guilt and guilt makes us liable to suffer the punishment which is due to our sins and proportional to our offences And our offences are augmented by the consideration of the dignity of the person against whom they are committed And being committed against God must therefore needs be very heinous and bind us over to suffer eternal punishment except we obtain a pardon and our sins be remitted 4. Let us consider by whom sins are remitted 1. Men may forgive offences committed against them so far forth as they concern them Luke 17.3 4. If thy brother trespass against thee rebuke him and if he repent forgive him and if he trespass against thee seven times in a day and seven times in a day turn again to thee saying I repent thou shalt forgive him But as Sin is a transgression of Gods Law so God only can forgive it 2. 'T is God the Fathers Prerogative to forgive Sins Isaiah 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgression for mine own sake and will not remember thy sins 3. God communicated this power to his Son while he was here on the earth who had power of forgiving sins as part of that power that was given him both in Heaven and Earth Mark 2.5 and 7. When Jesus saw their Faith he said unto the sick of the Palsie Son thy sins be forgiven thee The Scribes ask who can forgive sins but God only Their position was good that God only can forgive sins but their supposition false that Christ was a meer man and not God as well as Man 4. Ministers may forgive sins not authoritatively but Ministerially and declaratively They preach remission in Christs name declare what persons they must be and what they must do who shall obtain it 5. Let us consider upon what account and for whose sake sins are forgiven The external impulsive cause inclining God to pardon us our sins and trespasses is the respect he hath to the obedience and sufferings of our Saviour Jesus Christ The Apostle tells us Rom. 3.24 that we are justified freely by the grace of God as by the internal impulsive cause of our justification by which he was first moved to forgive us our sins and then through the redemption wrought by Jesus Christ as the external moving or impulsive cause of so great a mercy The death of Christ is the meritorious cause of our forgiveness Mat. 26.28 For this is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins Ephes 1.7 In whom we have redemption through his blood the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his grace Acts 13.38 39. Be it known unto you therefore men and brethren that through this man is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins And by him all that believe are justified from all things from which they could not be justified by the Law of Moses 1 John 1.7 And the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin Rev. 1.5 Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood God is indeed said to remit our sins but never to remit the price without which we had never been redeemed The Law promised life but upon perfect absolute uninterrupted obedience and the voice thereof was Do this and live But this we failed in we need therefore the interposition of the Sacrifice of Christ for us The atonement made by the Sacrifices under the Law clearly had relation to the death of the Messias and whatsoever vertue was in them did operate through his death alone As he was a Lamb slain from the foundation of the world in Gods decree so all atonements which were ever made were only effectual through his blood So that no sin was ever forgiven but by vertue of that satisfaction and God was never reconciled to any sinner but by intuition of that propitiation Yet the general doctrine of remission of sins was never clearly revealed and publickly preached to all Nations till the coming of our Saviour in the flesh 6. Let us consider what forgiveness of sins doth import and contain in it Forgiveness of Sins doth comprehend in it reconciliation of an offended God and a
all these glorious favours and benefits Let thy Soul rejoyce in God and call upon all within thee to praise his holy name 6. Pray earnestly that Christs Kingdom may be propagated and that many others may come to understand and partake of this great salvation purchased by our Lord and Saviour Pray that he may be more known believed on and faithfully obeyed all the world over And so much of the duties to be performed in time of receiving I come now to those required of thee after thou hast received For it is not enough that thou duly prepare thy self for this ordinance and carry thy self reverently at it but thou must labour to walk suitably unto it afterwards To that end observe these directions 1. When the Ordinance is done withdraw thy self to some secret place and there on thy knees bless the Lord for Jesus Christ and for the Covenant of Grace made in him and for adding the Sacraments as Seals of the Covenant to confirm thy faith And further for giving thee to be born in a land where the glorious light of the Gospel has shone so clearly for so many years and where thou hast such great helps and advantages for the eternal good of thy Soul 2. Labour to keep thy heart in the fervent love of God and Jesus Christ and with an holy delight and joy meditate often how much thou owest to God for sending his Son to be thy redeemer and how much thou owest to Christ for so willingly condescending to undertake this great work The Apostle tells us 1 Pet. 2.7 that to them that believe in him he is precious yea very precious in many respects 1. His name is precious 'T is as an ointment poured forth Matth. 1.21 His name shall be called Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins And 1 Thes 1. last 'T is Jesus who delivereth us from the wrath to come 2. His person is precious being God and Man in the same person What an high honour is it to be related to him 3. His Offices are precious He is Prophet Priest and King and he took on him all these offices for our benefit 4. His performances are precious both his active and passive obedience 5. His Life is precious which was so holy so humble so exemplary 6. His Death is precious being a propitiatory Sacrifice for our sins 7. His Resurrection is precious For God releasing him from the prison of the grave thereby declared he had received full satisfaction for the debt of our sins which he as our Surety undertook to discharge 8. His Ascension is precious For he ascended into Heaven as our fore-runner to prepare a place for us 9. His Intercession is precious For he ever liveth to make intercession for us 10. His authority and power is precious whereby he governs his Church and which he will farther exercise in raising our bodies from the Grave and in Judging the World at the last day and making our bodies if we be his members like his own glorious body 11. His Doctrince is precious 12. His Ordinances are precious 13. His ●nterest is precious to all that truly believe in him 3. Meditate on the priviledges promises and comforts of the Covenant of Grace sealed by the blood of thy dear Savior The priviledges are Justification Sanctification Adoption Glorification O how great are these priviledges The promises are such as these Psal 84.11 The Lord is a Sun and shield the Lord will give grace and glory no good thing will he withold from them that walk uprightly And Rom. 8.28 All things shall work together for good to them that love God The comforts are the consolations of the Spirit here and eternal comfort hereafter 4. Earnestly beg and humbly expect grace from Christ to enable thee to crucifie thy inward lusts and corruptions especially those thou findest thy heart most pestered with Having entertained Christ into thy Soul do not unhallow it again by suffering any evil lust to reign and rule therein 5. Labour to walk more watchfully Remember the Devil will now be very busie to tempt thee to sin after this ordinance as he did our Saviour presently after his Baptism He will if he can by some worldly diversion damp and cool those heavenly affections that were excited in thee in time of receiving 'T is a dangerous thing after an heat and warmth of heavenly affections to catch cold 6. Labour to strengthen thy purposes and resolutions of living more unto God Remember thou hast stronger obligations now upon thee to all Christian duties than before 7. Often meditate on the joys of Heaven and the eternal Supper of the Lamb and the blessed life which the Saints do live above Luke 14.15 Blessed is he that shall eat bread in the Kingdom of God 8. Labour to live in charity with thy brethren to which thou art in an especial manner engaged by this Sacrament Do not cover the coals of contention under the ashes for a night or two and then blow them up again But consider if Christ hath so loved thee and forgiven thee so much thou oughtest to love thine enemies and heartily forgive them Remember what the Apostle saith Beloved if Christ so loved us we ought to love one another 1 John 4.11 Lastly When thou art tempted to sin remember thou hast been at a Sacrament and there hast renewed thy Covenant with Christ and thou must not be so base nor so false as willingly and deliberately to sin against him again And thus much of the duties to be performed before we come to receive and in the time of receiving and after we have received A Brief Exposition OF THE Lords Prayer OUR Saviour Matth. 6.9 c. taught his Disciples after what manner to Pray and gave them a breviary or pattern of Prayer which they might use in form as seems to be intimated Luke 11.2 or according to which they might order and regulate their other Prayers In this Plat-form there are three parts 1. The Preface Describing God to whom we are to pray 1. By his dear Relation to us Our Father therefore most ready to succour us and others with whom or for whom we pray 2. By his greatness and Majesty which art in Heaven that is who doth manifest hims●lf though he be every where present in Glory and Majesty in and from the highest Heavens and therefore most able to hear and help all his children and most justly to be reverenced loved and trusted in by them 2. The substance of the Prayer containing six Petitions The three first whereof have respect to Gods Glory the three latter to our selves and our particular good 1. Hallowed be thy Name wherein we Pray and Petition that Gods glorious Nature and Attributes viz. his infinite Power Wisdom Goodness Justice Truth Mercy c. which are discovered in his word and works and whereby he is made known as men are by their names may be displayed and more manifested to the world that all
threatnings denounced in his word against swearers were meer scar-crows and whether Ministers made more ado than needs in their faithful and compassionate warnings of you and whether all they were fools and cowards that feared God and durst not sin against him at the same dreadful rate that you did I know very well that whoever shall now go about to stop you in your carreer of sinning and though with never so much tenderness shall labour to shew you the evil and danger of your course shall presently in all likelihood have the Fanatick or hypocrite thrown in his face But say what you will there are none so truly mad as those that are wicked and ungodly nor any in the world grosser Hypocrites than they that under a Christian name live a Heathenish and Paganish life And tell me I pray you whether you would not think that Dog to be mad that you saw flye in his Masters face that kept him and are you then any thing short of mad men that dare thus impudently and daringly defie your Creator 'T is the observation of Livy the Roman Historian that when the destruction of a Person or Nation is destined then the wholsom warnings both of God and Man are set at naught You may go on if you please and despise your reprovers but when you have done laughing at them read these Scriptures and laugh if you can Prov. 29.1 He that being often reproved hardneth his neck shall suddenly be destroyed and that without remedy 1 Sam. 2.25 'T is said of Eli's Sons they hearkned not unto the voice of their Father because the Lord would slay them But O the blindness of those whom the God of this world hath blinded These wretched sinners as if swearing were not sufficient to sink them deep enough into Hell and cursing also to it which whoever frequently use have a peculiar brand in the Scripture set upon them to be desperately wicked Psal 10.4 7. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seek after God His mouth is full of cursing c. How ready are these desperate wretches if they be but crossed by a servant or a beast in their business or recreations to fall a blaspheming and cursing wishing the plague of God or some other dreadful evil may fall on such or such As if every time they are angry or any thing displeaseth them the great God of Heaven and Earth must instantly be at their beck and in all hast come down to avenge their quarrel and serve their malice But the wickedness of these men is so transcendent that I shall say no more to them now but leave them to consider when they are best at leisure that dreadful place Psal 109.17 18 19. As he loved cursing so let it come unto him as he delighted not in blessing so let it be far from him As he cloathed himself with cursing like as with a garment so let it come into his bowels like water and like oyl into his bones 6. Having now done with the Arguments and Reasons which sufficiently demonstrate the heinousness of this sin I come in the next place to answer these vain pretences and excuses which customary swearers use to make for themselves 1. They are apt to plead that they have been long used to it and have got a habit and custom of it which now they cannot easily leave To which I answer that this is a very irrational plea. For he that is an habitual sinner is far more abominable in the sight of God than he that sins only upon a particular temptation or provocation Would any man think this a good plea for a Thief to make at the Bar My Lord I have been so long used to thieving and stealing even from my youth and am now so accustomed to it that I cannot leave it Is not this a strong reason why he should not be spared but the more speedily sent to the Gallows And moreover the truth is this is a very vain pretence For those that have been long accustomed to swearing can and do ordinarily forbear it when they are in the presence of grave and serious persons whom they do reverence and respect Confident I am were it made High Treason against the King as it is against the King of Heaven profanely and customarily to swear and curse it would be left and forborn For the will hath a despotick and commanding power over the tongue as well as other members of the body and can restrain it if it please and therefore it is a very vain excuse for any to say they cannot leave it 2. Some will say they had not sworn if they had not been provoked to it For answer to that let such persons consider that the provocations they speak of would be ineffectual and not prevail upon them if their hearts were not very corrupt For how many good and gracious persons meet with great and perhaps greater provocations than these men meet with who yet are never provoked to swear or curse or do any thing like unto it If therefore there were not a naughty heart within accustomed to sin the outward temptation would not so prevail 3. Some will plead they shall not be believed except they swear To which I answer no wise man will believe a man the more but rather the less for his swearing For he that makes not conscience of one sin in all likelihood will not of another when he sees it is for his outward advantage to commit it There is no reason to think that man will stick to lye who sticks not to swear And if such persons who do usually swear do indeed believe in God why do they not obey him who forbids them to swear if they do not why should we believe them when they swear by God 4. Some swearers will say they mean no harm by it For answer to that let them consider whether any Prince in the World will allow a Subject of his to use his tongue as he pleases to his dishonour and put it up because the man sayes he means no harm by it Much less will the King of Heaven bear with their audacious profaning of his name upon pretence that thou intendest no harm Such as a mans tongue is such is the man For as our Saviour saith Matth. 12.34 35. An evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth evil things and a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh 5. Some will say they swear but small oaths viz. By the Virgin Mary or as we usually abbreviate it yes Marry or by their head or by the ligh c. To which I answer that we are not to think any sin small which we willingly commit seeing the wages of the least sin is death And further we are to consider that swearing when duly called to it is an act of worship which we ow to
Jesuitica aequivocatio mentalis reservatio hoc ipso mendatii convincuntur quibus haec in usu sunt nimirum quia cum veram propositionem animo concipiant falsum tamen enuntient Davenant in Colos Therefore he that speaks what he thinks does not tell a lye though he may speak an untruth or that which is in it self false And in such a case what he sayes is falsiloquium but not mendacium a falshood but not a lye He offends not against moral truth or veracity because he speaks as he thinks and so he does not lye but is himself mistaken 'T is formale mendacium a formal and direct lye when we express or affirm a thing otherwise than we conceive or think with an intent to deceive 2. I come to consider the several sorts or kinds of lyes And so a lye is usually distinguished into Jocosum Officiosum Perniciosum 1. Jocosum when a man uttereth a lye in sport to make others merry To this we may apply that of the Prophet Hosea Chap. 7. Verse 3. They make the King glad with their wickedness and the Princes with their lyes They that tell lyes meerly to make others laugh are guilty of this kind of lying 2. Officiosum when a man tells a lye to help another out of some present danger or inconvenience God himself will not be served with a lye Job 13.7 Will ye speak wickedly for God Will ye talk deceitfully for him We may not lye for Gods cause or glory much less may we do it for any mans benefit * Plato was no good casuist for Christians who allowed a lye either to save a Citizen or deceive an enemy And the piae fraudes allowed among the Papists are also much of this nature 3. Perniciosum when a man tells a lye which tends apparently to the hurt or damage of another either in his life goods or good name 3. I come now to shew the great evil and malignity of this sin 1. 'T is a sin that makes men most unlike unto God God is a God of truth and cannot lye He is stiled the Lord God of truth Psal 31.5 Deut. 32.4 and Isay 65.16 That which makes men so unlike the true and holy God must needs be an odious sin One of the Antients said well that two things make us like unto God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to speak truth and to do good And surely this consideration that lying is against the holy nature of God should work in us an extreme detestation of it 2. 'T is a sin that God hath declared in his word a great abhorrence of as may appear if you consider these following Scriptures Prov. 6.16 17 18 19. These six things doth the Lord hate yea seven are an abomination to him A proud look a lying tongue c. A false witness that speaketh lyes and him that soweth discord among Brethren Levit. 19.11 Ye shall not lye one to another Prov. 13.5 A Righteous man hateth lying c. Rev. 21.8 The fearful and unbelieving and the abominable and whore-mongers and sorcerers and Idolaters and all lyars shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone Rev. 22.15 Without are dogs and sorceres c. and whosoever loveth and maketh a lye Psal 101.7 He that telleth lyes shall not tarry in my sight Hose 4.1 2. Hear the word of the Lord ye children of Israel for the Lord hath a controversie with the inhabitants of the Land because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the Land By swearing and lying c. they break out and blood toucheth blood Zech. 8.16 17. These are the things that ye shall do Speak ye every man the truth to his neighbour execute the judgement of truth and peace in your gates c. And let none of you imagine evil in his heart against his neighbour and love no false Oath For these are the things I hate saith the Lord. Ephes 4.25 Wherefore putting away lying speak every man truth to his neighbour Col. 3.9 Lye not one to another seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds 3. 'T is a great perverting of that noble faculty of speech which God hath given unto man God hath given unto man a tongue to express his mind and to reveal and declare what he apprehends in his heart so that his tongue is to be the index and discoverer of his mind Now you know if the index or hand of a Clock should point to eight and the Clock presently strike ten we should say it was a lying Index and greatly out of order The case is so here when the tongue utters one thing and the mind thinks another 4. Lying is a work of the Devil and makes people resemble the Devil in a manner John 1.44 Ye are of your Father the Devil and the lusts of your Father ye will do he was a Murderer from the beginning and abode not in the truth because there is no truth in him When he speaketh a lye he speaketh of his own for he is a lyer and the Father of it Pride Malice and Lying are the Devils sins after a more especial manner And who would be willing to be like the Devil 5. Lying is destructive to humane society 'T is injurious to all converse between man and man How shall a man know what to look for or what to expect or what to trust to if he cannot believe the persons he deals with but finds that in what they affirm to him or assure him of or promise to him they notoriously lye unto him and palpably deceive him 6. 'T is a sin condemned by the light of natural conscience The more ingenuous among the Heathens abhorred it The Apostle quoteth a verse out of Epimenides a Heathen Poet wherein he condemns Cretians for their frequent lying Tit. 1.12 The Cretians are are alwayes lyars evil beasts slow-bellies * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 7. 'T is a reproachful a shameful sin The maddest fellows and most Ruffianly and debauched who make so little conscience of other sins yet cannot induce to be charged with a lye because 't is looked upon as a cowardly and shameful sin Whoever gives them the lye provokes them beyond all patience 'T is the cause of many duels and many times murders Hear what that excellent person Mr. Herbert saith in his Poems Lye not but let thy heart be true to God Thy mouth to it thy actions to them both Cowards tell lyes and those that fear the rod. The stormy-working soul spits lyese and froth Dare to be true Nothing can need a lye A fault that needs it most grows two thereby 8. Lying easily disposeth to perjury He that useth frequently to lye 't is to be feared he will not much stick at forswearing himself upon occasion For when the heart is once hardened in one sin it is mighty proclive to another of the like kind and nature 9. It makes a man useless in the
world When a man is once looked upon as a person that cannot be believed no body cares to have any thing to do with him For he that is not true in his words will not be thought honest in his dealings So that having lost his good name he is incapacitated to do good or benefit others 10. 'T is a sin that being frequently committed wonderfully hardens the heart and fears the conscience Therefore customary lying is called the way of lying Psal 119.29 And they that are in that way usually have sinned down all tenderness of conscience 11. We should remember how it is made the note or character of a righteous man to speak the truth from his heart and the wise man tells us Prov. 12.22 That they that deal truly are Gods delight but lying lips are an abomination to the Lord. 12. Destruction is the lyars reward Psal 5.6 Thou shalt destroy them that speak leasing c. Rev. 21.8 Lyars shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone Prov. 19.5 He that speaketh lyes shall not escape And so much of the third particular the great evil and danger of this sin 4. I come now to give some remedies and directions against it 1. Seeing people are so prone to this vice through natural corruption let all humble themselves before God for every sin of this nature that ever they have been guilty of in any part of their lives Sins that we truly repent of we are careful to keep our selves from for the future 2. Let us labour to keep our selves innocent Saepe delinquentibus promptissimum est mentiri Faultiness commonly causeth faultring and sin usually putteth men upon shifts to save themselves from blame Take heed therefore of committing faults and then thou wilt not need to tell a lye to help thy self The best way to avoid lying is to endeavour alwayes as much as possibly we can to be faultless and blameless 'T is too too usual for Children and Servants when they have done amiss and are blame-worthy to seek to hide their faults with a lye and when they have told one lye that that may not be discovered or found out to back it with four or five more and so they heinously increase their guilt But they that labour to walk innocently and blamelesly need no such miserable and wretched shifts as these are 3. Let us fear the displeasure of God more than the wrath of men If we be affraid of mans anger for our faults which is but short and transient how should we fear the insupportable wrath and vengeance of God which is everlasting The one is but like a drop of scalding water falling on our flesh the other like being thrown into a furnace of boyling metal No mans displeasure how hot soever is to be named the same day with the anger of the Almighty Your Parents or Masters may be angry with you and threaten to correct you but God threatens to damn you and which of these two are you most to consider 4. Think it a less evil to take shame to thy self by confessing thy fault than to hide it with a lye 'T is Pride that makes people so impatient of the hard opinion of others And shame is to some persons so intolerable a suffering that they will rather venture to displease God than man and chose rather to tell a lye and expose themselves thereby to the wrath of God than indure a little shame or disgrace from men Whereas if they had a right understanding and discerning of the difference between good and evil they would think it far the better course to take shame to themselves by confessing their faults than to hide it with a lye 5. Labour to foresee in what particulars and upon what occasions you may in all likelihood be most in danger of faultring or telling a lye and there set a stricter watch and guard upon your self fortifying your self with the greter care and caution against this vice 6. Labour to keep your consciences tender that it may smite you when you are apt to warp or start aside from your duty And reverence your conscience when it checks you and listen to it 7. Live as in the sight and hearing of God and walk as one that is passing on to judgment 8. Labour to get a keen hatred and detestation of this vice Represent it to your thoughts as a sin of an odious and shameful nature And if you be affraid of shame be affraid of lying which is in it self so shameful 9. Earnestly implore the grace of God to keep you from this sin Earnestly beg of God that you may never be left to your self at any time or upon any occasion whatever 10. Set a watch over the doors of your lips Take heed of speaking hastily or rashly or too much For in the multitude of words this sin is seldom wanting 11. Take heed of a greedy and an immoderate desire of gain How many trading people for a small and inconsiderable advantage for a two-penny or three-penny matter will not stick to tell a lye and deceive Hear what the Prophet Micah preached in his days Chap. 6. v. 9 10 11 12. The Lords voice cryeth unto the City c. Are there yet the treasures of wickedness in the house of the wicked and the scant measure that is abominable shall I count them pure with the wicked ballances and with the bag of deceitful weights For the rich men thereof are full of violence and the inhabitants thereof have spoken lyes and their tongue is deceitful in their mouth Therefore will I make thee sick in smiting thee in making thee desolate because of thy sins We read in the fourth of Matthew 8.9 v. that the Devil took our Saviour up into an exceeding high Mountain and shewed him all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them that is as I suppose pointed to him where they lay and told him that all these would he give him if he would fall down and worship him But alass the Devil need not bid so high for the souls of men now a-days If he take them but into a fair or market or into a shop for a small gain they will lye and serve him 12. Take heed of envy and malice which often put people upon lying When men owe such and such persons ill will they care not what they say of them How sad and corrupt were the times wherein the Prophet Jeremiah lived who in his ninth Chapter verse 4.5 speaks to the Jews after this manner Take ye heed every one of his neighbour and trust ye not in any brother for every brother will utterly supplant and every neighbour will walk with slanders and they will deceive every one his neighbour and will not speak the truth They have taught their tongue to speak lyes and weary themselves to commit iniquity So the Prophet David complained in his time Psal 12.1 2. Help Lord for the Godly man ceaseth for the